Abstract
At the northern end of the Cap Corse peninsula, several klippes of ultramafic rocks (peridotite and serpentinite), among which the Monte Maggiore klippe is the least serpentinized one, rest upon continental-crust derived rocks (Centuri gneisses) and basic or metasedimentary schists (Schistes Lustrés). The Monte Maggiore ophiolitic klippe shares several characteristics with the Cima di Gratera klippe located 30 km further south. First, the two units are composed of a lherzolitic peridotite. Second, they record the same succession of metamorphic events. Third, in the Cap Corse tectonic pile, the two units occupy the highest structural position. Several differences are also observed. First, mafic rocks are significantly less abundant in the Monte Maggiore unit, where they are restricted to dykes cross-cutting the peridotite, than in the Cima di Gratera unit, where they constitute an entire sub-unit. Second, pyroxenite layers are more common at Monte Maggiore than at Cima di Gratera. Despite these differences, the Monte Maggiore and Cima di Gratera klippes can be considered as possible lateral equivalents of a single ophiolitic unit having covered the entire Cap Corse before subsequent erosion. Pseudotachylyte of seismic origin is newly discovered in the Monte Maggiore klippe. The host rock is a cataclastic serpentinized peridotite affected by a cataclastic foliation that is either flat-lying or steeply dipping. Pseudotachylyte fault veins are parallel to the host rock cataclastic foliation. The small lateral extension and the small thickness of fault veins along with frequent cross-cutting relationships suggest that the exposed pseudotachylyte most likely results from numerous small magnitude seismic events such as swarms or aftershocks rather than from large magnitude shocks. All these characteristics are also observed at the Cima di Gratera klippe where they are interpreted as the testimonies of a fossil intermediate-depth Wadati-Benioff zone at the time of subduction of the Ligurian Tethys oceanic lithosphere. Mineral assemblages that could constrain the depth of formation of the pseudotachylyte lack in the Monte Maggiore area. Despite this uncertainty, and given the similarities with the Cima di Gratera occurrences, the pseudotachylyte veins newly discovered at Monte Maggiore are tentatively related to the seismic activity linked with the subduction of the Piemonte-Ligurian oceanic lithosphere in Eocene times. This interpretation suggests that the fossil Wadati-Benioff zone could be traced further south in Alpine Corsica and further north in the Piemontese zone of the western Alps.
Highlights
Subduction zone seismicity consists of shallow earthquakes, intermediatedepth earthquakes, and deep-focus earthquakes
All these characteristics are observed at the Cima di Gratera klippe where they are interpreted as the testimonies of a fossil intermediate-depth Wadati-Benioff zone at the time of subduction of the Ligurian Tethys oceanic lithosphere
Pseudotachylyte veins exposed in the Cima di Gratera ophiolitic unit, Cap Corse peninsula (Alpine Corsica, France), are of seismic origin and a part of them was generated under blueschist to eclogite facies metamorphic conditions (Austrheim and Andersen, 2004; Andersen and Austrheim, 2006; Andersen et al, 2008, 2014; Deseta et al, 2014a, b, Magott et al, 2016, 2017)
Summary
Subduction zone seismicity consists of shallow earthquakes (hypocenters shallower than 60 km), intermediatedepth earthquakes (hypocenters between 60 and 300 km), and deep-focus earthquakes (hypocenters deeper than 300 km). Pseudotachylyte veins exposed in the Cima di Gratera ophiolitic unit, Cap Corse peninsula (Alpine Corsica, France), are of seismic origin and a part of them was generated under blueschist to eclogite facies metamorphic conditions (Austrheim and Andersen, 2004; Andersen and Austrheim, 2006; Andersen et al, 2008, 2014; Deseta et al, 2014a, b, Magott et al, 2016, 2017) These veins were most likely formed in Late Cretaceous or Paleogene times during earthquakes in the Wadati-Benioff seismic zone of the Ligurian Tethys oceanic lithosphere subducting beneath a continent or an island arc. They allow a discussion of the geodynamical significance of the Corsican pseudotachylytes within the general framework of the Alpine orogeny and the detailed setting of a Wadati-Benioff seismic zone of a subducting Tethysian oceanic lithosphere in Mesozoic to Cenozoic times
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